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Take the blame
Article Number: 2686
 
Here’s a claim I thought you’d enjoy reading about because it’s so convoluted it will make you feel like you’re on a merry-go-round. The claim is for excessive wear and dark soil lines. The carpet was looked at by three different inspectors, each hired by one of the involved parties—the manufacturer, the builder and the cushion manufacturer.

The carpet is installed over a rebond cushion, which admittedly has failed and having done so is being blamed for the excessive wear. The cushion manufacturer has admitted liability for the failure of its product and agreed to replace it, but it denies any responsibility for the wear on the carpet. The carpet manufacturer disagrees with this report stating most of the wear is in areas where the cushion has failed, and lack of support is a known contributor to carpet wear. That is correct.

The builder’s inspector, who actually did an excellent job, stated correctly that the dark lines are air filtration soiling, but he stated this is a natural condition caused by return air restriction and effective insulation and not the builder’s fault. Actually, the airflow is not being restricted; it is finding the path of least resistance. This is a problem with the home and its HVAC system, so it is the builder’s fault. The system must be balanced and the airflow restricted to keep it from affecting the carpet.

The rest of the inspector’s report, relative to the wear issue, is right on the money. He invokes the manufacturer’s warranty for wear, quoted in his report, and he did a very thorough inspection revealing the cause—yarn ply separation. He underlined the parts of the warranty that justify the claim; he also used the CRI Field Evaluation Reference Scale for wear and appearance loss, which grades the carpet. This product got a very low mark, which holds up the complaint. The product was found to be defective.

The manufacturer’s inspector said the soiling is the fault of the home, and there is no carpet wear. The builder’s inspector said the soiling is not the fault of the home but is the result of the carpet being defective and the cushion failing. The cushion manufacturer’s inspector said the cushion has failed, but it has not contributed to the wear of the carpet.

All three find the party that hired them not responsible for what they actually are responsible for. Here we have problems that are being reported as not being the fault of the party actually responsible, and then being responded to by the responsible party as not being their fault. Bottom line: consumer up the creek without a paddle. She has a very legitimate claim with failures being caused by the builder, the manufacturer and the cushion manufacturer that none will admit to, other than the cushion guys, who will replace the cushion but claim no liability for the carpet wear complaint.

What a colossal run around! The best part of this is the carpet manufacturer’s own warranties and the industry’s own standard—developed by the carpet manufacturers—proves the carpet is defective and justifies the claim and replacement, but the complaint is denied because the wrong inspector correctly determined where the blame lies, so it isn’t a claim—right?

This is one of the most messed up and frustrating complaints I’ve ever seen. Nice going guys, hang the customer out to dry and wonder why business is off and people are buying wood. I’ll quote it again: “We have met the enemy, and he is us.”

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Date
11/15/2007 12:51:38 PM
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Transmitted: 11/28/2024 6:05:38 AM
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